Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, February 23, 1913, NEWS SECTION, Page 9-A, Image 9

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    TTTF OMATIA SUNDAY TJKE: FEBRUARY 23, 1913.
9-A
CROOKS MAKING A GETAWAY i
. t
Schemes of sFugitives for Outwitting
Watchful Police.
Auto Manufacturers Send Their Best Products to the Omaha ShoM
ELABORATE PLANS OFTEN FAIL1
Some Xotnrloti Instance Jithcrrl
from JVrw York mill Sonllnntl
Vnnl ItrcordH Tlir
Crcnt Alibi.
1 you any knowledge of the wide
ad.- closc-meshed net thnt the polL'
. 19W oii til capture the Mr criminal?
" The niomrnt a big- orlmu Is committed
ml the Identity of Its perpetrator dis
covered the first thine tho police do '.t
to set a photograph and a good desoilp
tlon of the criminal.
Just to show how careless people nre
In getting before u camera whet th;
shutter s open, It may l recalled tnut
"Gyp the Blood" and other New Yot
gunmen sat for a tintype group atmont
on the ovo of committing tho ftosont.tnl
murder, a tintype that duly fell Into tne
hands of the police.
As eoon as the pollco secure the desired
photoBruph It Is given to a half-tono
man. 1 It takes about an hour to produoo
plates from which good likenesses of 1
fleeing criminal can be printed.
Meanwhile the typesetter has done H.s
work: and before tho minute hand has
had time to make more than a few trips
around the clock's face circulars are sent
broadcast over the face of the earth,
giving one or more pictures of the fugi
tive, a full description ntot only of his
physical appearance, but also of th
clothes he wore when last seen, the occu
pation tlmt he Is likely to seek employ
ment In or tho variety of graft he Is apt
to ply and the class of associates he Is
likely to flock with.
International .Comity
Broadcast over the earth Is no exag
geration. Uvery police chief and consta
ble In tho United States gets one. One 's
sent to every American consul, and the
consul passes the word along to tho
proper local authorities.
More than this, the police communicate
directly with the necessary foreign police
If there Is any reason for suspecting that
the fugitive Is headed for any particular
foreign shore. International comity In
diplomatic, circles Is not deuce-high com
pared with International comity In police
circles. The codo Is. You nab 'cm for
me and I'll nab 'em for you.
This means that there. Is a pollcemnn
at the end of every cable, of every tele
graph wire, who will act, and act quickly,
when tho request is flashed from the
proper authorities. To put this world
wldo police force on tho Job, Scotland
Yard dispatched cables costing 1,700
when Dr. Orlppen and his companion,
Miss Denove, were missing after the
strange discovery in Hllldrop Crescent,
Camden Town.
Now to get back to headquarters. Even
while the halftone man was engraving1
the plates tho department's official pho
tographer was making and developing
negatives from which to print hundreds
of extra pictures of the missing man.
These pictures are for tho newspapers,
and tho pollco have good business rca.
.sons for giving them.
ThlfliPlasterB the land with a mass of
pictorial and printed Information such as
no police dspartment In Itself could over
hopo to equal.-
And thla newspaper pbbllclty stirs Into
activity tho most efficient detective force
.that ithe're Is- In the world the great -In
qulsltlvo public.
t Most people have a fondness for In
quiring Into other people's business. A
man cannot move, Into a house, Into a
country village. Into a backwoods shanty.
but what his neighbors begin to pry into
his antecedents.
Suspicion oil the Job,
If the stranger dodges 'Inquiry or tho
details. of his story do -not hitch together,
that actlvo though ancient Individual, old
Mr. Suspicion, immediately gets on tho
job. From the decision that there Is
something' about tho tnah he "mistrusts"
he passes on to tho conclusion that he's
the runaway crook whose picture he saw
in the newspaper, and a "tip" Is forth-,
with dispatched to th'ej 'official huntsmen
to come capture their quarry.
How little It takes to arouse the Ubi
quitous Individual Is shown by tho count
less "tips" that pour In upon the police
every tlmn a crime Is perpetrated that Is
given newspaper space. Every "tip" re
ceives attention. It Is usually found that
old Mr. Suspicion Is running around on
false trails, but often he finally lands on
the right one, and the much wanted
"straight tip" is received by tho police.
All this perhaps gives some Idea of the
vast machine that Is put In motion when
.Organized Justice attempts to run down
a criminal.
Now, how does the crook attempt to
solvo his getaway problem?
Ills move Is usually to make a quick,
ZET2i0I!rJuR fiSjjffiSSl h CLEVER TRICKS OF ORATORS
hr would le obllKed to sit , to recover hlm
re.f. "I should think,' said a Judge to him
on day," "that tho Jury would under
stand ymir HUto dfarrta by this time"
"Ah, your honor forgets," said tho law
yer, his eyes twlnklln. "that there Is
always a new Jury before whom I play
lilsmarck held profuond contempt not
only for such tricks of oratory, but for
ointory Itself. "It Is but the gloss that
hides the truth," ho would say. "Tour
eloquent fellow Is like a woman who has
a naturally fine figure and who screws
It Into slays and covers it with tasteless
finery." Washington Star.
Nuts to Crnrlc.
I-ots of men have been spoiled by
success, but we havo yet to hear of a
weather forecaster In that class.
There wouldn't be much excitement In
the world If men were as perfect as their
wives expected: them to be.
It Is often difficult to swallow a hnnl
lucl story without' coughing up.
I.ovr Is n cannibal that feeds on Us
own kind.' New York Times.
HEAD COVERED
WITH
ERUPTI
0
Barber's Hair Began to Come Out.
Combed Ounce of Scaly Matter
from Head psr Week". Had Be
come Bald, Cuticura Soap and
Cutlcura Ointment Cured.
Box 8877, Lancaster, Neb. "My hair
began to come out la 1003. It was perfectly
dry at all times and I combpd on tho average
adouv one ounce or wnito
scaly matter from my head
per week. I am ft barber by
trado so you can guess that I
uaod pretty nearly everything
on the map. But the trouble
continued, to get worse, I had
come to the point where from
scratching my scalp my bead
was covered with sores. Sleep
was out of the question.
"After reading about Outlcura I gave It
a trial, and after I had used the Cuticura
Soap and Ointment twice, my head ceased
to itch, and in three week the sores were
nearly gone. I had become bald, but after
three months' use of Outlcura Soap and
Ointment I have a full head of hair again.
My trouble lasted me from 1603 until tha
spring of 1012, andUdu the Outlcura Rem
edies did what all other had failed to do.
I recommend It to my customers, and tha
public la general." (Signed) Lutier B. Gib
son, July 10. 1012.
A single cake of Outlcura Soap and box of
Cuticura Ointment are often sufficient when
all else has failed. Outlcura Soap (25c) and
Ointment (60c.) are sold by druggists and
liters everywhere. Sample of each mailed
tree, with 83-p. Sldn Book. Address post
card " Outlcura. Dept. T, Boiton "
.WT end or-faced' men should use Cuticura
Soap Eharlng Stick, 25c. Sample free.
long Jump from the placo where he Is
known to some placo where he hopes he
will be unknown.
Arrived In tho city where h hnllnvnx
himself unknown, the fugltlvo's first step
Is usually to label himself with a now
name. It Is a peculiar cusi
tlycs that they usually keep some remnant
or incir Identity In their aliases. Thui
Porter Charlton, when ho ,wns fleeing o
this country after tho murder of his wife
at Lako Cotno, traveled as Jack Cole
man of Omaha, the city In which he was
born.
This custom undoubtedly Imln.
trailing a fugitive, but It also Is of as
sistance to tho fugitive himself. After
knowing himself as John Smith all his
life-answering to this name, uttering :(,
signing it as unthlnklnclv n i, rt..,..
hlB breath or winks his eycllds-it Is dlff-
i-un 10 Keep constantly in mind the Im
portant fact that only tho
ceased to be John Smith and becamo Will-
'"lnuc- reserving a remnant of nlB
Identity In his alias Is undoubtedly an aid
to memory.
t... Dnnireroni, DlaKiili.cs.
Vlth a new name label ther is nlen nn
effort usually made to present a new ap
pearance to the world. Tho matter of
disguise Js a dangerous one that must be
nanoieu gingerly. Tho usual method Is
to chango the style of wearing the hair,
to shavo the face if It be adorned with
whiskers, or to let whiskers sprout If It
be smooth-shaven. These were the
methods used by Dr. Cook In his well
known vanishing act after, tho perpetra
tion of his better known North polo hoax,
and they served him fairly well.
Hair dyes, wigs and face stains are
sometimes used, but It must bo done with
consummate skill or it will be found
to be boomerangs.
Almost Invariably tho style of clothos
is changed. But here, too, the utmost
caution must bo exercised. Thd man
who Is very anxious to hide himself Is
likely to overdo the matter, concluding
that the greater chango in his costume
the deeper Is his concealment.
What tho surgery of the beauty doctors
can do-perhaps has done-for the fugitive
.v ui wmcn mo writer has no
knowledge, no instance yet having come
under official attention. Tho beauty doc
tors advertlso that they will make facial
alterations, small or extensive, for tho
man who Is dissatisfied with the outfit
Nature gave .him, and perhaps they can
do it. If the fugitive who, when IbbI
seen and photographed, wore a pug nose,
flap ears and a trlplo chin, next aftpeared
In public nattily outfitted with a Greek
nose, ears hitched back, a single chin nnrt
a dlmnlA In hi inft 1 j..
- . ...w ..v lJUIUU i no
Tuy drinks at tho next bar for Sherlock
Holmes, Arscne, Lupin and Mr. Hawk
shaw, if he happened to find those three
sieums on his trail?
Disappearance Itnaea.
And now for one of the most popular of
an disappearance ruses, it consists of
estamishing the great and final alibi. In
making those Individuals to whom one
wisnes to nm a lasting adieu believe that
one has departed this earth and gone to
tne Hnining Shore.
The favorite method of working this
ruse Is to engage passage on a steam
ship. If the thing is dona economically
a river boat win do. The next morning
a stateroom Is found that contains a
valise the contents of which are tossed
about as evidence of a harrowed mind.
The bed clothes are rumpled.
The suit "of clothes that tho iate'occu
pant wore aboard lay where they wcro
flung on tho floor; in tho pockets, watch,
letters, etc. All these mute articles tell
the traglo story, to which u suicide note
often gives emphasis.
But tho lamented, passenger Is not float
ing, stark and colli; miles astern. In the
early morning hours, when the decks
were deserted, ho climbed through tho
stateroom window, dressed In a rough
suit that had been squeezed Into his va
lise, and made his way. to the baggage
hold. Having already provided himself
with the necessary ticket, he walked
I ushoro with the other second-class pas-
sengers tho moment the steumer tied up.
I Dj-, Crlppen, when fleeing after tho
i murder of his wife, contemplated trying
mis ruso aDoaru me steamship Montrose. I
FRENCH "ROMANCE" AS IT IS
Arteitin- IVnrd's Abridged Imitation
n ftlic Fashionable lore
Story.
On tho sad sea shore I Always to hear
the moaning of these dismal wavesl
Usten. I will tell you my story my
story of love, of misery, of black despair,
I nm a moral Frenchman.
She whom I adored, whom I adore still,
Is tho wlfo of a fat marquis a lop-eared,
blear-eyed, greasy marquis. A man with
out a soul, A man without sentiment,
who cares nought for moonlight and
music. A low, practical man, who pays
his debts. I hate him.
She. my soul's delight, my empress,
my angel, Is.superbly beautiful.
I loved her at first sight-devotedly,
madly. s,
She dashed pnjt jne In' her coupe. I
saw her hut a moment perhaps only nn
Instant-but she took me captive "then
and there, forevermore.
Forcvermorcl- ,
I followed her after that whercvor
she went. At length she came to notice,
to smile upon me,', My motto was en
avantl That Is a French word. I got It
out of tho back part pf Worcester's dic
tionary. She wrote mo that I might come and
see her at her own house. "Oh, Joy, Joy,
unutterable, to see her at her own house!
I went to seo her after nightfall In the
soft moonlight.
She came dowp the graveled walk to
meet me on this beautiful' midsummer
night came to me In pure white, her
golden hair In splendid disorder
strangely beautiful, yet In tears!
Sho told mn her fresh grievances.
The marquis, always a despot, hart
latterly misused her' most vilely.
That very mdrnlng at breakfast he
had cursed the ffshpalls and sneered nt
the pickled onions.
She Is a good cook. The neighbors
will tell you so, Apd to be told by tho
base marquis a mnn who previous to
his marriage haft lived at the cheap
eating house's to bo told by him that
her maner of frying flshballs was a
failure It was tod much.
K Her tears fell fast. I, to6, wept. I
mixed my sobs with hor'n. "Fly with
me!" I cried.
Her lips met mine. I hold her In my
arms. I felt her breath upon my cheek!
"Fly with me. To New Tork! I will
write romances for the Sunday papers
real French romances with morals to
them. 5Iy style will bo appreciated.
Shop girls and young mercantile persons
will adpre It. and I will amass wealth
with, my ready pen."
Ero sho could reply ore she could ar-
He wrote a couple of touching farewell ! tlculate her oc?tasy, hor husband, tho
bands who has only had three or four;
bettor ask a spinster.
Every spinster believe that his satanlc
micjoaty is a married man.
People who are. rolling In wealth should
be able to find a better use for It.
Lazy people ought to be transformed
Into rivers; then they could stay In their
beds.
If you want to hear a quiet man talk
fluently, start him to talking about hi
pet enemy.
The average young man worries a lot
more about getting his salary than he
does about earning It. Chicago News.
HOLLAND'S SCENERY CHANGES
Steam anil Other Forms of I'orrer
nnnlHlilnsr the Hallowed
-Windmill.
wan right
Weekly.
In his
Tonul .Hlinjlluu nnil Other Acessorlen
Are DrslKiic.l to lttiireR
l.lstrnern.
Gre'at orators have not scrupled to use
tho arts of the nclor to produce their
effects. Lord HroUKhham, while protest
ing against the rejection of the reform
bill by the house of lords, cried out: "I
Implore you upon my knecsl" Jneellng
before them on the "woolsack," upon
which tho lord chanclllor sits when pre
siding In (he hotiso of lord.
Sheridan, having' finished his famous
speech In tho trial of Warren Hastings,
Bank back apparently fainting In tho arms
of his friends.
Edmund nurkc. nt the end of a speech
upon tho atrocities which might bo ex
pected from the French In case of an
Invasion, drew forth nn enormous two-
edged dagger and exclaiming, "This Is
the weapon which will be pointed at your
throats nnd miner dashed It on the
floor with a tragic gesture.
Shortly after Lord Cairns, spcaklnr
against Qurke (who was suspected of
having amassed his wealth dishonestly)
exclaimed; "Ann this is the weapon
which Is used with fatal effect against
you and mot" dragging out with Uurkts
gesture a flvo-pouud note. As every one
looked to seo him dash It on the floor, he
quietly folded It and put It In his pooket
One of the most noted criminal lawyers
of this country, while- pleading the causo
of his cllont, was Invariably so overcome
by tls Innocence and wrongs that his
6ontentloh.Hatlpers voloe would fall, his utterance would bo
come choked, and he would sob bo that
Stops Tobacco Habit in
One Day
Sanitarium I'uMInIici Kroo Ilonk
HIiowltiK How Tobacco Ilftlilt Can
' Ito llnnlsliid in From One
to Vive Days nt Home.
Tlin Kldern Sanitarium, located at 1090
Main St.. St. Joseph, Mo., has published
a free book showing tho deadly effect of
the tobacco habit, and how it can bo
baulnltod In from one to flvo days at
home
Men who havo used tobacco for more
than fifty years have tried this method
and say It Is entirely successful, and In
addition to banishing the desire for to
bacco has Improved their health won
derfully. Thla method banishes the de
sire for tobacco, no matter wnotuer it
s smok tig. chew nif. cigarettes or snurr
dipping.
Am tho book Is being distributed free
anyone wanting a "opy should send their
name ami auuress at once. Aavcriise-
tnent.
(
Weir
Blue Rlbb-n Metal Pdish
Outshines and Outlasts .
Them All
It In n thick cream polish an
emulsion. The quickest nnd best for
motale constantly exposed to tho
weather; best for lnsJde work; best
all around pollen.
"It removes the tnrnUh- not llic
metal." Ask for free- sample Get
our prices.
POWELL SUPPLY CO.
ai 10 Farnam.
bjijbjijijjb!
notes. On a certain night the ship's
quartermaster, who was In the plot, was
to secret Crippen In the cargo and then
I go to a dark part of one of the decks and ! Btrecl
marquis, crpt snake-like upon me.
Shall I write It? He kicked mo out
of the gnrden-he kicked me Into the
' toss something overboard that would
j make an audible splash. Crlppen was to
j be smuggled ashoro when the ship dooked
jat Quebec. But the scheme struck a
snag In the watchfulness of tho ship's
I captain, who, through the use of the wire
less, had been taken Into the Scotland
Yard end of tho plot.
That wonderful orook, Mine. Diss de
Bar, played the game on a commonplace
'Jersey City forry boat, and so success,
j fully that, sho was believed to be really
( and truly dead until a year later, when
; blie bobbed up In Jollet prison.
' There are many other ways of trying
( to establish trjo great alibi. The dotcct
j Ives of tho life" Insurance companies run
across It In all Its variations. New York
Times.
Key to the Situation lifee Want Ads.
I did not return. How could I? I. in
ethereal, so full of soul, of sentiment, of
sparkling originality'. He, so grots, so
practical, so lop-eared!
Had I roturned the creature would
hnve klQked me again.
So I loft Paris for this place-thls place,
so lonely, so dismal. -
Ah, me!
Oh dear.' From "Artemus Ward's Best
Stories."
Pointed Paragraphs.
A diplomat knows when It Is pollay to
know nothing.
You may be good, yet that's no sign
that you are happy.
Bvery gqld brick peddler Is sure the
world owes him a living.
People who are light hearted aren't
necessarily feather brained.
With the people who can t forget, the
l ast Is always present
Don't ask a woman how to manage hug-
It is said that there nre 10,000 wind
mills In Holland, The number Is said,
however, to. be less tlran" it was fifty
years ago, for tho Dutch have, In n
'measure, substituted steam and other
forms of power for tho capricious wind'.
On the eastern end of Long IbIiih.1
there may be seen old windmills. Tha
curious may observe tSat there Is a
tiny wlndmllle In many cases, perched
on tho top opposite the great arms, a
feature that suggests a pug dog's curled
tall. Those who havo Investigated the
mechanism of the wlniSmlll know that
the littlo windmill Is tho Yankee method
of automatically keeping the sails on the
great arms always In the wind. As soon
as the wind changes, It puts the small
wheel In motion, and this quickly rolls
the top of the tower nnd the big wheel
around until It ngaln faces the wind,
then, being Itself out of the wind, It
stops. Whenever tho wind changes In
Holland, hundreds of mlllkeepcrs come
forth and laboriously turn the tops about
by hand. They may bo econ pushing
and straining on the galleries surround
ing the towers midway between the
ground and the top or tugging at the
pokes of a wheel on the ground.
Zaanland Is especially tho homo of the
windmill, It lies to the north and west
of Amsterdam, and every town or vil
lage in this district begins or ends n
"zaan "
KaandlJIk. nccordlng to ono traveler,
perpetually reminds one of the old query:
"Do you see anything' greon?" Every
thing In Kaundljlk Is green. Bridges,
fences, doors, windows, walls are green,
ranging from the green of peas to that
of apples, olives, grass, malachite, beryl,
old bottles and verdigris. '
It was at Zaanland, a town of this dis
trict, that Peter tho Oreat learned the
art of shipbuilding. In a little museum
of this placo thero are shown many
models of windmill, among which Is
that of the first windmill erected In
Kaandam. It stood In the water, and
when It was desired to turn tho sails
towards tho wind the miller was obliged
to get Into' his boat and, taking a line,
tow the wholo strueture around until it
was In u working position again. Iater
on the mill was set on a post and the
whole turned about this as an axis. In
the same manner thnt one revolves book
she Ives. Then another method was de
vised. Tho ehtlro edifice was turned
about from tho bottom like, a monitor's
turret. Finally, the comparatively mod
ern type was adopted, that of a cap hold
ing the axle and sails with a cog wheel
and spindle Inside and easily moved from
below by a hand wheel or windlass to se
cure the proper frontage at will.
The IyOrd of Voorst and the Over
IJssel monastery were parties to a suit
Involving the question as to who owned
the wind and enjoyed the right "to em
ploy It. The old feudal master asserted
that Boreas and all the puffings of h'ls
cheeks that frisked over the country
were his. The bishop of Utrecht, to
whom the suit was referred, decided
(perhaps ho knew on which side his
bread was buttered) that the crc-at lord
When you visit tho show go boo tho cur of extra vtil
uos 'amounting to hundreds of dollurs. Hidden vulues
thnt go into every CiiBe Car.
Values in tho construction and metalB that show only
on tho road, after tho car has been run 5,000 to 10,000
niilos. That savo in the cost of upkeep and repair bills.
These aro tho snliont features of the Case Forty.
You want a stylish car of course. Tho Cuso, from tho
standpoint of stylo, is perfection. But you're also buy
ing a car to keop, so consider these facts.
How We Don't Save
Wo could make large savings on the cost of our
motors iiy using cheaper materials and leaving out vital
features. Tho rollor push rods in these motors aro found
olsowhoro only in tho highest priced cars.
Wo could savo on our clutches, transmissions, drive
shafts, wheels and other essential points.
Wo could mako largo savings on axles if wo used
other than completo Timkens.
Wo use tho same radiator that $5,000 cars employ.
Wo could cut our assembling cost in two, and this
cost is one of tho greatest.
Just Samples
Wo aro paying extra costs in this manner through
4out the entire car. Those vital, unseen values amount up
to hundreds of dollars a car.
No other car that wo know selling at tho Case price,
$2,200, contains thorn.
CASE FORTY
The Car With the
Famous Engine
ft
6-Posacnger Touring, Fully Equipped, $2,200
combination Oil and lSlectrlc, Warner
WcstliiKhouse Klectrlc Starter
for all Lamps; Hide and Tall I.nm
Wcstlughouse Klectrlc Lighting System
.nmp.i. combination Ol and lSlectr c. Warner
Automotiir, Klectrlc Horn, Haiti Vision Ventilating Wind Shield. Kngllsh
Mohair Top, Side Curtains and Cover, 37x4 H-lncti Tires, Flrestoiio Uni
versal Quick Detachuhlo Demountable Hints, 124-Inch Wheel Base, Three
quarter Elliptic Springs, 44x6U'liicli Cylinders. Browne-Llpo Transmis
sion: Tlinken Kull Floating Axle; Ilayfield Carburetor with Dash Adjust
ment; Bosch Magneto, Dual .System Single Point Ignition. The usual Tools,
Tire llepalr Kit, Jack, etc. And In addition Extra Tire and Tubs on Btm,
Extra Tube ssparata, Tire Chains, Tire Cover and Handy Work Light on
long wire.
Why We Can Give
These Values
We havo been making the
finest machinery in its lino
for tho past 70 years. Wo aro
able to mako unusual factory
savings. Our capital is $40,
000,000. We created no now
business when wo began,
making automobiles. We
saved on systems, on costly
experiments. Wo added little
selling cost, no officers',
sales manager's, advertis
ing department snlarios, of
fice retnt or other such over
head. Wo had all our agenta
before a car was put out. Wo
put all these savings into the
car. Wo aro soiling thou
sands of Case Cars to our old
customers who have owned
our machinery for years.
We aro staking a 70-year
reputation. Don't you think
you enn take our word for
theso values until you provo
thorn out on tho road?
Note the Style
' Go see the Case Forty
Booth No. 58, at the Omaha
Automobile Show. Note tho
stylo and refinements. You
can judge those yourself.
Write for letters
from owners. Or
come through tho
factory and see
how we mako Case
Cars.
There nover was
built so much car
for tho monev. Wo Th Em-
. . , b 1 e in o n
guarantee that.
See, also, tho
Case "30" a t fhn6costeVi8-
$1,500. "
J. I. CASE T. ML COMPANY, Inc., RACINE, WIS.
Co.no Cnrs nre sold through 10,000 Agent and 05 Branch Houses
They will be on exhibit at all leading motor shows